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LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 



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Committee 



Appointed by His Honor the Mayor to Conduct 
Appropriate Exercises 

JOHN D. CROWLEY, Chairman 
(Commander, Cambridge Post, American Legion) 

MRS. HUGH McGINNESS, Secretary 
(President Cambridge Auxiliary, U. S. W. V.) 

EBEN C. PIKE 
(Representing Cambridge Posts, G. A. R.) 

LOUIS C. BOWE 
(Commander, Hunting Camp, U. S. W. V. 

ELLIOTT E. McDowell 

(Commander, Hoyt Post, V. F. W.) 

GEORGE D. COLGAN 
(Exalted Ruler, Cambridge Lodge, B. P. O. Elks) 

MRS. MARGARET AVERY 
(President Cambridge Unit, American Legion Auxiliary) 

MRS. AUSTIN C. WELLINGTON 
(Daughters of Massachusetts) 

MRS. LUCIA B. OSBORN 
(Daughters of American Revolution) 

Essay Prizes Contributed by 

Cambridge Lodge, No. 839, 

Benevolent Protective Order of Elks 



Memorial Exercises Commemorating the 

Sixty-Fourth Anniversary 
of the birth of 

Theodore Roosevelt 

held at the 

Cambridge City Hall 

Friday, October 27, 1922 

Memorial Address 

BY 
T. Harrison Cummings 

also 

LIST OF BOOKS 

in the 

CAMBRIDGE PUBLIC LIBRARY 

By and About Roosevelt 




Programme 

nr 



Selection WISTARIA TRIO 

Invocation REV. JOHN A. BUTLER 

Opening Address HON. E. W. QUINN, Mayor 

Flag Exercises GIRL SCOUTS OF AMERICA 

"Personal Recollections of Roosevelt — The Soldier" 

COMRADE HUGH McGINNESS. U. S. W. V. 

Piano Selection MR. FRANK O'BRIEN 

"Theoiioke Roosevelt, the American' Citizen" 

PRIZE WINNING ESSAY (RINDGE SCHOOL) 

Vocal Selection MISS HELEN MAHLER 

"Theodore Roosevelt, the American Citizen" 

PRIZE WINNING ESSAY (GRAMMAR SCHOOL) 

Violin Selection MISS MAE MURRAY 

Oration MR. T. HARRISON CUMMINGS, Librarian 

Selection WISTARIA TRIO 

Presentation of Prizes to Essay Contest Winners 

GEORGE D. COLGAN, E. R. 
Finale— "The Star Spangled Banner" 

WISTARIA TRIO, SOLOISTS, AND ENSEMBLE 

Ushers 
Veterans of Civil, Spanish and World's Wars 




1 Stuilios, New York 



THE EAILXEST "PREACHER" IN 
ACTION 

From "Roosevelt's Religion" 

Copyrig-ht, 1922, by Christian F. Reisner 

—The Abingdon Press 




Birth of Flag in 1775 at Cambridge (as visualized in the Cambridge Public Library 



Roosevelt Memorial 



Commemorative exercises on the sixty-fourth anniversary of the 
birth of Theodore Roosevelt were held Friday, October 27, 1922, 
in the city council chamber, under the auspices of the mayor's com- 
mittee. 

Included on the progranmie were prize winning essays on Roose- 
velt by students from the public schools. 

The oration of the day was given by Librarian T. Harrison 
Cummings. 

Address 

Of the 29 presidents of the United States, from 1789 to 1922, some, 
not all, were great men. Some were great men whom mankind has 
always been delighted to honor, by raising statues to their memory in 
the world's Pantheon of great men ; others were less great perhaps, 
but were privileged men, men who rendered distimguished services to 
their country; and America has crowned them with a wreath of im- 
mortelles, because they added something in what they did for their 
country to the sum of human knowledge and they strengthened faith 
and trust in demo(;racy and popular government. 

All of our Presidents were great patriots. For history shows that 
whatever their failings were in private life their public services were 
prompted by motives that were always pure and essentially patriotic. 
And here in America everything is forgiven the patriot. America loves 
those who love America and the flag. Our flag is a sacred symbol of 
all our ideals of government — a government, as Lincoln said, "of the 
people, for the people, and by the people." In its ample folds today 
are enshrined the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution of 
the United States, the farewell address of Washington, and the words 
of Lincoln at Gettysburg. Its red and white stripes — lines of red blood 
and white purity of purpose visualize the sacrifices made by the gen- 
erations who have preceded us. And today that flag, resplendent with 
forty-eight stars, embodies all the hopes and all the aspirations of the 
freedom-loving people of the earth. 

We believe that the hand of God himself through all our history, 
from Washington to Harding, is shaping the destiny of mankind. 
And even he who now serves this chosen people, let us hope, will be 
numbered among the illustrious great men. And time will never dim 
the lustre and fame of this our present Chief Magistrate, Warren G. 
Harding, the twenty-ninth President of the United States. So immor- 
tal is the magic power of American patriotism. 

Sometime in the future, my friends, when the world's Pantheon 
shall be erected to the great men of the earth, the inhabitants of 
America, whether north or south, east or west, in the northern or 
southern hemisphere, will instinctively look for two statutes — two 
monuments — Washington, first in war, first in peace, and first in the 



hearts of his countrymen. And side by side with him the great man 
in the second epoch of the nation's history — Abraham Lincoln. Their 
joint names will be linked together, as the two great types of chivalry 
in American history. Washington, the eighteenth century cavalier 
and aristocrat. Lincoln, the nineteenth century statesman, martyr, 
and saviour of his country. The one, the flower of the age of privilege 
and class distinction : the other the blossoming of the age of democ- 
racy and universal brotherhood. 

And now we come to the third epoch in the history of our nation. 
I do not forget that there have been other great men, great patriots 
and great leaders among our national heroes, in the presidency. In- 
deed, it is hard to believe that any other nation ever produced a line 
of men so noble, so generous, and so patriotic as those we are talking 
about here tonight. But ideas and ideals are the most powerful and 
permanent forces in the world. When the Great War, through which 
we have just passed, ended with the complete collapse of the German 
army at Chateau Thierry and Belleau Woods, the most powerful and 
perfectly organized military machine that the world has ever seen, 
it taught us a great lesson— namely : that the spirit of truth and lib- 
erty in the hearts of a free people is incomparably stronger than any 
organized despotism, and mightier than the sword of any military 
hero. The old order has changed and the new order, the American 
idea of a real people's democracy has tumbled down the throne of 
kings and wrecked the autocracy and divine rights of kaisers and dic- 
tators everywhere, and has set the people free. 

Free government is only possible when self-control and mutual 
benefits constitute the guiding spirit of its citizen's and when these 
are planted deep in the hearts and lives of the people. The public 
mind must be educated today to new ideals ; and we must learn to 
respect organized authority before we can have a safe government 
"of the people, for the people, and by the people." America today 
stands for liberty under the law because liberty is protected and made 
safe by law. And Americans know that only through obedience to 
the law can liberty exist. 

May I not give you a truer idea of American liberty by recalling 
the fact that in the Declaration of Independence, that immortal docu- 
ment, the word liberty occurs but once while the word law occurs ne 
less than eight times. In the Constitution of the United States, our 
bill of rights, and our charter of our liberty, there are fifty laws, 
which signifies plainly that liberty in America is only possible to a 
law abiding people. Our freedom rests on obedience to the law, the 
law of the land, and our flag today is the symbol of liberty and justice 
to all. For instance, in our Civil war, we fought out this ideal over 
fifty years ago — that all men are created free and equal, and we lib- 
erated a race of people, whom we had oppressed and enslaved. When 
Abraham Lincoln, dipping his pen in the sunlight, wrote those immor- 
tal words in his Emancipation Proclamation, "henceforth and forever 
free," he made a distinct contribution to the organized freedom of 
mankind, and today Americanization means makimg everybody under- 
stand not only the privileges but the duties which belong to every 
American citizen, no matter where he was born. Here, in America, 
there is no distinction, class, or creed. All are Americans together. 
Men, women, and children share these privileges alike. It is this that 
makes us a united democracy, working together, shoulder to shoulder 
in mutual helpfulness, and this alone is true Americanism. 

And the man who stands as the personification of this new era of 
Americanism and democracy, the chief leader in the present civic 
renaissance of the American people and the one great apostle of the 



ideals and lofty principles of American democracy was the late 
Theodore RooseVelt. the twenty-sixth President of the United States. 

Tonight we are gathered here to pay our tribute of reverence 
and respect and gratitude to the majestic name and memory of one 
of the greatest citizens of the American republic. All our voices 
should be sounding his praises, regardless of what our political affili- 
ations may be, because of the rich heritage of Americanism and Amer- 
ican history that we now hold in trust from him as a sacred legacy. 
This will be the subject of m^^ discourse. 

Passing briefly over his ancestry, childhood, and youth, we can 
hastily sununarize in a few words his entrance into political life, in 
New York, being elected to the Legislature in 1881, the youngest man 
in the House ; he was nominated for speaker in 1883, by the Repub- 
licans, who then abandoned him because he was fighting the bosses. 
This was his first real lesson in politics. In 1884, the legislative Roose- 
velt Committee was investigating New York City and that same 
year he headed the New York delegation, as chairman to the famous 
national convention, in which he opposed the nomination of James G. 
Blaine. Though he did not leave the Republican party, he defeated 
Mr. Blaine, with the famous "Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion" cry of 
Dr. Buchard. In 1888, he went on the stump for General Harrison and 
was given a place on the Civil Service Commission at Washington, 
which he accepted. After six years of service, he resigned and in 
May, 1895, was appointed Police Commissioner in New York. This 
made him a national figure because he was fighting "rum and rebel- 
lion" on the side of Romanism. In this connection I am reminded of 
an incident that happened in Boston, which shows how he was re- 
garded not only in New York but in Boston as well. At a K. of C. 
banquet given in Music Hall, Boston, on October 23, 1895, His Emi- 
nence, William Cardinal O'Connell, then a simple curate at Saint Jos- 
eph's Church in Boston, was one of the speakers. Responding to the 
toast, "the Church," he spoke as follows: "The truths of the Catholic 
church, the doctrines and dogmas, we are not free to change because 
they are God's ; but, in all else, in everything that goes to make good 
government, purity in morals, temperance, and charity, we take the 
hand of any man, be he Catholic, or Protestant." 

"Apropos of this — last night this platform wa_s occupied by a man 
from New York, Theodore Roosevelt, a man who in public life stands 
for everything that is honest and high-minded. He delivered a speech 
from that platform that is a lesson in breadth and liberality to all 
Boston and to all New England. At the end of his speech, I had the 
great pleasure to meet him. As he came forward, he took my hand, 
held it firmly and cordially, and said spontaneously, 'Father, permit 
me to say that in all my work with people of all nationalities — Protes- 
tant, Jew, and Catholic, the men who have been closest to me and 
upon whom I depend most are the Catholic priests of New York City.' 

"That sentiment from that man," said the Cardinal, "needs no 
comment, but stands for what it means; for Theodore Roosevelt is a 
man who says only what he means." 

In April, 1897, he was appointed Assistant Secretary of the Navy, 
the bosses reluctantly allowing him to have the office where he could 
be shelved politically and do no harm. But no office, however obscure, 
could ever bury a man of his restless spirit. President McKinley and 
his cabinet invited the Assistant Secretary of the Navy to a cabi- 
net meeting. Mr. Roosevelt advised the President to say to Spain 
that if she sent a fleet of warships across the Atlantic, this govern- 
ment would regard it as an act of war. Mr. McKinley laughingly 
•told his cabinet about it, saying that Roosevelt has the whole pro- 
gramme of the war mapped out. The cabinet liked the joke so well 
that the President was urged to invite the Assistant Secretary to a 



r.iectiiiii-. \Ir. Roosevelt went before them boldly and unafraid and 
gave his views in no uncertain terms. When he retired they all 
)aagtied, tlunking the joke was on Roosevelt. But it turned out later 
that if the sailing of the Spanish navy had been averted, the Spanish- 
American war might have been averted— which put the joke on the 
cabinet. 

His war record was very creditable and his bravery was unques- 
tioned. He led the Rough Riders, at the famous battle of San Juan 
Hill, ar.d at the close of the war his Rough Riders were welcomed 
homo ;is the heroes of the war, and their leader became a popular idol 
in the eyes of the people. He was nominated and elected governor of 
the Empire state in 1899, and the following year, November, 1900, w.is 
elected \'ice-President of the United States, with President McKinley 
as his superior officer. His enemies believed now that this would 
end him politically — as the Vice-Presidency had always been a politi- 
cal tomb from which no occupant had emerged in more than sixty 
years. 

But they counted without their host. The hand of fate that so 
relentlessly rules us all intervened and before six months had passed, 
on September 6, 1901, an American President for the third time fell 
before the assassin's bullet. President McKinley, who was holding, a 
public reception in Bufifalo, New York, at the Pan-American Exposi- 
tion, was cruelly shot down by a young man of his own state of Ohio. 
One week later, on September 14, he passed away, while the people, 
from whom he had sprung, and the American nation he had so nobly 
served, mingled their tears in the kinship of a common sorrow. 

Twelve hours later. Vice-President Roosevelt had arrived in Buf- 
falo and took the simple but solemn oath that all the Presidents from 
Washington to Harding have taken. "I do solemnly swear that I will 
faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and 
will to the best of my ability preserve, protect, and defend the Consti- 
tution of the United States." — Theodore Roosevelt. That oath made 
him the twent\-sixth President of the United States. He was then 
but forty-two years old, the youngest President that ever sat in the 
chair of Washington. Fate had been kind to him; for, within the 
space of three years' time, he had risen from the ranks of a soldier 
in the Spanish-American war, to the governorship of New York; then 
to the Vice-Presidency, and now he had become President of the 
United States, the highest office in the gift of the American people. 

The task that awaited him was indeed a stupendous one. He met 
his daily tasks with a lion's courage and astonished the country by his 
capacity for leadership and hard w^ork. "We Americans," he said, "can 
only do our allotted task well if we face it steadily and bravely, seeing 
but not fearing the dangers. Above all we must stand shoulder to 
shoulder, not asking as to the ancestry, or creed of our comrades, but 
only demanding that they be in truth Americans, and that we all work 
together, heart, hand, and head, for the honor and the greatness of our 
common country." Sound American doctrine to the core. 

He travelled fifty thousand miles in four years, delivered three 
hundred and fifty speeches, explained his policies in every state and 
territory of the Union. His efficiency no less than his fairness and 
independence won the admiration of all parties alike. They saw that 
he wa.s a man of indomitable energy, who knew how to get things 
done right — and they applauded him, irrespective of party allegiance. 
He served out the unexpired term of President McKinley, three and 
one-half years, and on June 23. 1904. was unanimously nominated for 
President by the Republican party, at Chicago. His consummate skill 
in manipulating public opinion was so overwhelming that he was tri- 
umphantly elected with one of the largest pluralties in history. 

On March 4. 1905, he was inaugurated again for a second term 



of four years. On delivering his inaugural address on this occasion 
he spoke as follows : 

"No people on earth have more cause to be thankful than ours, 
and this is said reverently, in no spirit of boastfulness in our strength, 
but with gratitude to the Giver of Good, who has blessed us with the 
conditions which have enabled us to achieve so large a measure of 
well-being and of happiness. 

"To us as a people it has been granted to lay the foundations of 
our national life in a new continent. We are the heirs of the ages, 
and yet we have had to pay few of the penalties which in old coun- 
tries are exacted by the dead hand of a bygone civilization. We have 
not been obliged to fight for our existence against any alien race ; and 
yet our life called for the vigor and effort without which the manlier 
and hardier virtues wither away. 

"Under such conditions it would be our own fault if we failed; 
and the success which we have had in the past, the success which we 
confidently believe the future will brinig, should cause in us no feeling 
of vainglory, but rather a deep and abiding realization of all which 
life has offered us ; a full acknowledgment of the responsibility which 
is ours; and a fixed determination to show that under a free govern- 
ment a mighty people can thrive best, alike as regards the things of 
the body and the things of the soul." 

It is well to read and ponder what has been written or spoken on 
Inauguration day, by one to whom the people had entrusted their 
Presidency-. Here we have the real man revealed to us at last ; we 
may question his party politics as being wise or imwise — but no one 
can read the sentences of this message without believing that the 
author is not only a patriot but intensively American. He is tr3nng 
to make the world better in seeking the triumph of good over evil 
and so far as he can, is striving to have righteousness prevail on the 
earth. Later on he said, "The labor unions shall have the 'square 
deal' and the corporations shall have 'square deal' and in addition all 
private citizens shall have a 'square deal.' This government shall 
never be a plutocracy." And true to his word he brought the railways 
and trusts into court. He got after the meat packers by having Con- 
gress enact a pure food law. — he brought the coal barons to terms by 
wielding the power of public opinion and forcing the settlement of 
the coal strike. 

His maxim was. as he expressed it. "to speak softly and carry a 
big stick." Directness, courtesy and diplomacy made him an ideal 
peacemaker, so that everywhere President Roosevelt was pictured 
and even caricatured as the apostle of the "square deal and the big 
stick." 

"The strenuous life" was another phrase that he coined and ex- 
emplified before the world on all occasions. "I wish to preach, not 
the doctrine of ignoble ease, but the doctrine of the strenuous life — 
the life of toil and effort, of labor and strife; to preach the highest 
form of success which comes not to the man who desires easy peace, 
but to the man who does not shrink from danger, from hardships, or 
from bitter toil, and who out of these, wins the splendid ultimate 
triumph." 

The man was a physical marvel both in his wonderful capacity 
for work or plav. He radiated energy Just as the sun radiates heat 
and light. The White House atmosphere when he was at home fairly 
gleamed and sparkled with electric energy. Everybody and every- 
thing kept moving. Yet with all his activities, few students or scholars 
read more than he did. It is said of him that he always rested with 
a book in his hand. He loafed with Dante and Plutarch. Herodotus 
and Thucydides. Indeed a list of only part of his reading for two 
years in the presidency is bewildering in the number of titles and 



authors and its wide scope of literature. In the midst of the crowded 
campaign of 1904 he actually read all of Macaulay's "History of 
England," James Ford Rhodes' "History of the United States" and 
Dickens' "Story of Martin Chuzzlewit." As a librarian I do not care 
\o trust myself to comment on this subject further. 

But what more can I say of Theodore Roosevelt that has not 
ilready been written or said by lips more eloquent than mine? It 
is impossible for me to compress into a few brief remarks tonight the 
life of such a marvellous man and hope to convey to you an adequate 
sense of the man's greatness, and what we owe to him as a nation of 
freedom loving people. When the icy hand of death the fell destroyer 
was laid upon him, he saw the completion of a task, the awakening 
of high ideals of patriotism and justice in the heart of the American 
nation, that no other could have so well accomplished. He fell asleep 
on the morning of January 6, 1919. in the fullness of his fame and 
with the hope of immortality in his heart. 

A short time before his death, he wrote to a friend, "It is idle to 
complain or to rail at the inevitable; serene and high of heart, we 
must face our fate and go down into the darkness." 

Though the (great mystery of life and death, what we come from 
and whither we are going, had not yet been revealed to him, his body 
now lies buried in peace and his name and his spirit will live with us 
forevermore. 

His life teaches us that we are living under the best form of 
government, in these United States, ever devised by the ingenuity of 
man. We are living in a country of the greatest opportunities and 
any man however humble or poor he mav be by merit, honesty, and 
fidelity may rise to the highest honor. His life teaches us that every 
man in public life must be incorruptiblv honest, not alone in a finan- 
cial sense but honest in his dealings with the people in all ways. As 
Lincoln has said, "You can fool all the people sometime, and some 
of the people all the time, but you can't fool all the people all of the 
time." 

In summing up, if Mr. Roosevelt is to be remembered by his acts. 
three things alone have made him immortal: first, his constant and 
reiterated pleas by precept and example for stalwart Americanism; 
second, his crowning victory in establishing peace between Russia and 
Japan during the late Russo-Japanese war. one of the noblest achieve- 
ments of .\merican diplomacy — it thrilled the world ; third : his 
buildinig of the Panama canal, the greatest engineering feat in the 
pages of history. No triumph of war or peace can be compared with 
it. Through all the dark time of uncertainty and doubt as to what the 
future had in store for him and his mighty undertaking, he kept the 
project moving until he had actually cut the great continent of America 
in two. 

Abuse and misrepresentation were heaped upon him by his enemies, 
but he went serenely down the long road that seemed to him right. 
with his face lifted to the stars, still kissing the clouds of hope and 
fondly believing in the justice of his cause. His spirit was never 
broken and leadership came to him because he had an iron nerve 
and a heart that never quailed nor faltered. 

So in conclusion as long as the American people appreciate the 
achievements and noble sentiments of this great American hero the 
nation will still live. So long as there can be found anywhere a man 
to speak for American ideals of liberty and citizenship, created, as 
we believe, by God himself and shaped by the fathers of this republic, 
there will the name and memory of Theodore Roosevelt be cherished 
forevermore. 



A SELECTED LIST OF BOOKS ON ROOSEVELT 
IN THE CAMBRIDGE PUBLIC LIBRARY 

BOOKS WRITTEN BY ROOSEVELT 

Addresses and Presidential -.ncssageb. 1904. 815 — R67 

Atrican game tiails. 1910. 799— R6754 

America and the world war. 1915. 940.91— R67 
American big-game hunting : the book of the Boone and Crockett 

club. 1893. 799-R676 

American ideals, and other essays. 1897. 304 — R67 
Americanism. Address delivered before the Knights of Columbus, 

Carnegie Hall, New York, Oct. 12, 1915. (In his Fear God and 

take your own part.) 304 — R6712 

Applied ethics. 1911. 172— R67 

Book-lover's holidays in the open. 1916. 799— R6755 

Deer family. 1902. 799— R677 

Essays on practical politics. 1888. 329 — Rt)75 

Fear God and take your own part. 1916. 304 — R6712 

Foes of our own household. 1917. 304— R6713 

LLife of] Gouverneur Morris. 1888. B— M8335r 

The great adventure. 1918. 940.919— Rb75 
Hero tales from American history. By H. C. Lodge and T. Roosevelt. 

1895. 973— L82 

History as Hterature. 1913. 814— R675 

Hunting in many lands. Ed. by T. Roosevelt and G. B. Grinnell. 1895. 

799— R6761 
Hunting the grizzly, and other sketches. 1893. Note. — Part 2 of "The 
wilderness hunter." 799 — R6753 
Hunting trips of a ranchman. 1885. 799— R675 
Life histories of African game animals. 2 v. 1914. 590 — R67 
Life of Thomas Hart Benton. 1887. B^B448r 
Military preparedness and unpreparedness. (In his The strenuous 
life : essays and addresses.) 304 — R671 
National life and character. (In his American ideals.) 304 — R67 
National strength and international duty. 1917. 940.91 — R671 
Naval war of 1812. 1882. 973.5— R67 
1 History of J New York. 1891. 974.71— R67 
[Life of] Oliver Cromwell. 1900. B— C883r 
Outdoor pastimes of an American hunter. 1905. 799 — R6752 
Ranch life and the hunting trail. 1888. 917.8— R675 
Roosevelt in the "Kansas City Star." 1921. 940.919— R6751 
Roosevelt policy : speeches, letters, and state papers, relating to cor- 
porate wealth and closely allied topics. 3 v. 1919. 308— R67 
Rough riders. 1899. 973.8— R67 
Ship of state, by those at the helm. 1903. j353— Sh6 
The strenuous life. 1900. 304— R671 
Theodore Roosevelt : an autobiography. 1913. B — R675 
Theodore Roosevelt's letters to his children. 1919. B — R675a 
Through the -Brazilian wilderness. 1914. 918 — R67 
Wilderness hunter. 1893. 799— R6751 
Winning of the West. 1889-1896. 977— R67 



SELECTED BOOKS ABOUT ROOSEVELT 



Abbott, L. F. Impressions of Theodore Roosevelt. 1919. B— R675ab 
Andrews, Mrs. Mary R. S. His soul goes marching on. 1922. An29hi 
Bishop, J. B. Theodore Roosevelt and his time shown in his own 

letters. 2 v. 1920. B— R675bi 

Brooklyn, N. Y. Public library. Theodore Roosevelt: a bibliography. 

1920. 012— R675 

Burroughs, J. Camping and tramping with Roosevelt. 1907. 

B— R675ba 

. Camping with President Roosevelt. 1906. B — R675b 

Note. — An account of the trip to Yellowstone Park, in the spring 
of 1903. 

Cheney, A. L. Personal memoirs of the home life of the late Theo- 
dore Roosevelt, as a soldier, governor, vice-president, and presi- 
dent, in relation to Oyster Bay. 1919. B— R675c 

pouglas, G. W. The many-sided Roosevelt. 1907. B— R675d 

Elliott, E. Theodore Roosevelt. Growth through expansion. (In his 
Biographical story of the constitution.) MZ.73 — El53 

Gilman, B. Roosevelt, the happy warrior. 1921. B — R675g 

Hagedorn, H. Roosevelt in the Bad Lands. 1921. B— R675hb 

Hale, W. B. A week in the White House with Theodore Roosevelt. 
1908. B— R675h 

Hav, j. Theodore Roosevelt sketched by John Hay. (In Thayer, VV. R. 
" Life and letters of John Hay. Vol. 2.) B— H322t 

Henderson, D. M. "Great-heart": the life story of Theodore Roose- 
velt. 1919. B— R675he 

Lauzanne, S. J. V. Theodore Roosevelt — a man. (In his Great men 
and great days.) 940.91— L37 

Leary, J. J. Talks with T. R. from the diaries of John J. Leary. 1920. 

B— R675La 

Lewis, W. D. The life of Theodore Roosevelt. 1919. B— R675Le 

Lodge, H. C. Theodore Roosevelt. (In his The Senate of the United 

States, and other essays.) 814 — L823 

Morgan, J. Theodore Roosevelt, the boy and the man. 1907. 

B— R675m 

O'Laughlin, }. C. Fro:ii the jungle through Europe with Roosevelt. 
1910. ■ B— R675o 

Pearson, E. L. Theodore Roosevelt. 1920. B— R675p 

Riis, J. A. Theodore Roosevelt, the citizen. 1904. B— R675r 

Robinson, Mrs. Corinne (Roosevelt). My brother, Theodore Roose- 
velt. 1921. B— R675ro 
Roosevelt, K. The happv hunting-grounds. 1920. 799— R674 
Sewall, W. W. Bill Sewall's story of T. R. 1919. B— R675s 
Thaver, W. R. Theodore Roosevelt : an intimate biography. 1919. 

B— R675t 
Thwing. E. The life and meaning of Theodore Roosevelt. 1919. 

B— R675th 
Vrooman, F. B. Theodore Roosevelt, dynamic geographer. 1909. 

351.8— V96 
Washburn, C. G. Theodore Roosevelt : the logic of his career. 1916. 
^^^.,, , B— R675wa 

W ilheliii, D. Theodore Roosevelt as an undergraduate. 1910. 

V u T A n^, B— R675w 

/ahm, J. A. Through South America's southland, with an account of 
the Roosevelt scientific expedition to South America. 1916. 

918— Z12 
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 




LIBRARY OF CONGRES; 



013 981 492 7 • 



Hollinger 

pH8.5 

Mill Run F3-1955 



LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 



013 981 492 7 • 



Hollinger 

pH8.5 

Mill Run F3-1955 



